Article de Périodique
The development of a cocaine craving questionnaire (1993)
(Etablissement d'un questionnaire sur le manque de cocaïne)
Auteur(s) :
S. T. TIFFANY ;
E. SINGLETON ;
C. A. HAERTZEN ;
J. E. HENNINGFIELD
Article en page(s) :
19-28
Refs biblio. :
26
Domaine :
Drogues illicites / Illicit drugs
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Discipline :
PSY (Psychopathologie / Psychopathology)
Résumé :
FRANÇAIS :
Administration et analyse statistique de deux versions d'un questionnaire destiné à mesurer l'importance du manque chez les consommateurs de cocaïne.
ENGLISH :
Two versions of a 45-item questionnaire on cocaine craving were administered to 225 cocaine users. The Now version asked about current craving for cocaine, and the General version asked about average craving over the preceding week. Factor analyses showed that a four-factor solution best described the item structure for both versions of the questionnaire. Higher-order analyses indicated that each version was permeated by a single second-order factor. Factor scales derived for each primary and second-order factor had moderate to high reliabilities. Examination of item content, correlations of factores across version, and external correlates of the factors suggested that both version were represented by the same hierarchical factor structure.
Administration et analyse statistique de deux versions d'un questionnaire destiné à mesurer l'importance du manque chez les consommateurs de cocaïne.
ENGLISH :
Two versions of a 45-item questionnaire on cocaine craving were administered to 225 cocaine users. The Now version asked about current craving for cocaine, and the General version asked about average craving over the preceding week. Factor analyses showed that a four-factor solution best described the item structure for both versions of the questionnaire. Higher-order analyses indicated that each version was permeated by a single second-order factor. Factor scales derived for each primary and second-order factor had moderate to high reliabilities. Examination of item content, correlations of factores across version, and external correlates of the factors suggested that both version were represented by the same hierarchical factor structure.
Affiliation :
Department of Psychological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA